I've been saving up these links, but I'm so behind in school I haven't gotten around to using most of them. I thought I'd go ahead and post these great pre-school school ideas here, so you (and I) can find these links. Sometimes I get bogged down thinking I could make all this stuff myself. And maybe I could, but that's not really the point - I don't have too!
One page printable Itty Bitty books to help kids learn colors. I keep forgetting that my little one has to start at the beginning too...
Great lapbook activities based on Eric Carle's Brown Bear. (We actually put this together!)
More Tot books by the same blogger.
Mini Mural Sets and Masterpiece coloring books, that I love love. I can't resist introducing kids to famous painters.
Sequence cards for math readiness. There are tons of these - which is great. It may seem like the same exercise over and over, but the kids still love doing it.
Birds nest helpers - such a cute springtime activity. Gotta get my act together to do this...
5.04.2012
4.30.2012
Monsters
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| These monsters are friends. They're hugging. Aw |
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| He doesn't see the sun, because it's behind him. That's funny, because it so big. |
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| This monster is taller than the trees! And the trees are so tall they touch the clouds! |
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| Do you know why I put the tape here, Mommy? Because I thought it might tear right there. |
4.26.2012
Rattle Tutorial
I started to make a rattle-y toy for my book, but then it got scrapped. Still, I spent quite a bit of time investigating the best way to make the rattle part of the toy and thought I'd share these thoughts.
Make the rattle
Maybe, like me, you've learned the hard way you can't just stick a jingle bell inside of a plush toy. The stuffing compressed around it muffles the bell. My next thought was to stick it inside a plastic container to allow some air around it, but, to my surprise, the jingle bell rolling around inside the plastic egg became a muffled bell, and you could hardly hear the jingle of the bell.
So, for a jingle bell, I found that the best solution is to glue the bell to the plastic egg (or whatever container you're using. I used the small eggs that come from those 25 cent machines at the laundromat, but you could also use Easter eggs, prescription bottles, tic tac containers, etc.). So I used a strong glue to attach the bell to the lid of the egg - make sure the glue doesn't seep into the jingle bell and glue the little ball down! When its dry you can close the egg and secure it closed however you like - more glue, duck tape, etc. The result is a jingle bell that doesn't roll around and has plenty of air to make a nice jingle.
If you just want a bean rattle, you don't need to glue anything in place, just fill your eggs part way with beans (or plastic pellets, BBs, buttons, etc). Be sure to leave plenty of space so they can move around. Experiment with different materials to see what sounds they make. Then close the egg securely as before.
Inserting it in the toy
First wrap the rattle in a little batting. You can secure the batting around the egg with a little glue, or by whipstitch around it. Stick the rattle in the fullest part of the toy, and be sure that you put stuffing around it on all sides. This helps it get lost inside instead of feeling like a hard lump.
Those are my tips. How do you make a rattle?
Make the rattle
Maybe, like me, you've learned the hard way you can't just stick a jingle bell inside of a plush toy. The stuffing compressed around it muffles the bell. My next thought was to stick it inside a plastic container to allow some air around it, but, to my surprise, the jingle bell rolling around inside the plastic egg became a muffled bell, and you could hardly hear the jingle of the bell.
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| a jingle bell rattle |
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| a bean rattle |
Inserting it in the toy
First wrap the rattle in a little batting. You can secure the batting around the egg with a little glue, or by whipstitch around it. Stick the rattle in the fullest part of the toy, and be sure that you put stuffing around it on all sides. This helps it get lost inside instead of feeling like a hard lump.
Those are my tips. How do you make a rattle?
4.23.2012
short dates
We've been too busy this semester to schedule any real dates - but we've had fun nonetheless catching a few special moments. Here's a little catch up.
| 20 minute Valentine's dinner |
| the guest list |
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| the party planning committee |
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| L's painting of "Mommy and Daddy kissing on their wedding day" |
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| 3 minute anniversary date photo |
4.18.2012
Spring flower gardens
The girls were talking about flowers, and so we spent a day buying and planting flowers and seeds. I especially looked for flowers that would go from seed to bloom in a short time. We used: Nasturtiums, Marigolds, Zinnias, and forget me nots.
We also made a big pot look like miniature garden. It seemed timely with easter, and I really wanted to make a tomb and stone so it could be a resurrection garden (like this, this, this, or this), but we never quite got there. Still we planted it with succulents and flowers, then made a path of moss and set a rock in the middle. The girls talked about what they might do in the garden if they were small enough to walk in it: pray, think think think, smell the flowers.
No blooms yet, but we're keeping an eye on them.
4.13.2012
Spring Dresses
I saw this crazy simple lovely shirred skirt tutorial a month or so ago, and while I still haven't made one for myself, I thought that it would work so well with the pajama pattern I had just made for the girls. But instead, I decided to lengthen the top and make it a dress, making it flare out a bit at the bottom. I did about 10 rows of shirring. Again it was super simple, and it looked so lovely with a little sweater.
I think Lou's dress turned out looking more pajama like, but I think it's because the fabric is a bit thin. Anyway, it would make a great night gown, too, right?
And then I made bloomers, cause let me tell you teaching a 4 year old to keep her skirt down is rough (let's not even mention the 2 year old). Again I used the same pajama pants pattern, but made them really short. I used some stretch lace around the legs to make them snug around the legs and add a little frill. Unfortunately, you can't see the lace at all here, because by the time I took this photo they'd been running around through the grass like crazy, and I feel like a bad mom when I make my kids stand still for pictures too long (not to mention pictures of their bloomers). But anyway, you get the idea.
I realized as I took these photos that this will be our last summer here at this house, which is oh so bittersweet. Such lovely memories here.
4.10.2012
Buy this bread book, already.
I've been making so much bread lately. I love the 5 minutes a day bread book more and more every day. Most of the time I use the basic dough, use half wheat/half white, and just bake simple loaves.
We eat it with honey, hummus, or roasted garlic. Or plain, or sandwiches. It's so convenient and so yummy. The olive oil dough is our next favorite/most frequent, but I'm launching out into brioche now, so I'll have to get back to you on that soon...
4.09.2012
Spring Pajamas!
I have to preface this post with the disclaimer that I don't usually make clothing patterns - and the main reason is that I really don't know how to convert something from one size to another. Still I like to sew clothes when I can, and I can't help but love the simplicity of this style of shirt. So anyway, don't think of this as a pattern so much as a how-I-did-it-maybe-you-can-too.
These pjs were made during a few stolen hours one Saturday, when I was supposed to be sewing for the book. I saw this very pink flowery fabric and it suddenly dawned on me - this would be perfect for light spring pajamas! - because, I don't know why, but they love to be extra girly at pajama time.
I realized (while taking the picture of my unwilling models) that these clothes are a whole lot like the doll clothes patterns I've posted before. And because that's true, I haven't bothered to draft the pants here. If you need help, check out my doll clothes pattern, or have a look at Soulemama or Rookiemoms. I always trace a pair of pants I already have.The shirt is basically a raglan shirt with a really wide neck. You add elastic to make it a normal size with a ruffly kind of look.
The size I drafted below is what I'm calling a 3T. I enlarged it for the older kid, and it seemed a little too big, so then I had to take it up. So it seems like if you're enlarging you need to add less width than height? Does that sound right? Anybody know?
Well, anyway. The dimensions I used are below, with instructions for the shirt in the photo. It's super easy (just the way I like it), I made both sets of pjs in only a couple of hours.
And coming soon, I turned this same pattern into a spring dress set...
4.05.2012
Self-Portraits
In college I started a habit of taking a snapshot of myself at significant milestones. These were the days before digital cameras that do all the work for you, so most of these pictures turned out blurry, dark or cropped funny.
I continued doing this after John and I started our family. Thankfully, digital cameras came along, so most of them are at least in focus. But another important difference is the change in my sense of "self." Today, I get the camera ready, but before I snap the picture, we all smoosh our faces as close together as possible and say, "cheeeeeeese."
I was thinking of this today, as I pored over our silly photos. I am so grateful to be bigger than just me, to be a part of a family. Its far too easy to take this for granted, and makes me all the more aware of all my various close friends and that bond, too.
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| Family Portrait on the day we closed on our house! |
We still have busy-ness in abundance - but I'm tentatively back to blogging. Watch for a few patterns and tutorials this spring/summer, and plenty of house building updates!
3.03.2012
worth working for
I'm just popping in to say hello! I'm busy busy, but looking forward to the satisfaction of finishing several big projects. L begged me to make a kangaroo a few months ago, so I drafted one, but have yet to make it. Any takers? Perhaps we'll see one this spring.
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| periwinkles and failed biscuits |
I'll keep trying though. Somethings are worth working for, right?
What are you working on?
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